There is no peace for Fredrik “TiAMO” Neij, one of the three founders of The Pirate Bay finally sentenced to prison and a harsh monetary fine by the Swedish Supreme Court this past February: Yellow Bird, one of the media (films and TV) companies that brought the case to the court, wants the Stockholm District Court to declare Neji bankrupt.

The final verdict on The Pirate Bay case imposed Neji to stay 10 months in jail and to pay several million dollars as compensation for the “damages” allegedly suffered by the media companies because of illegal file sharing on the BitTorrent network: of this overall sum, the Bay ex-admin owes 1 million dollars to Yellow Bird.

By declaring Neji bankrupt, the company hopes to recover some of the money after the man’s assets will be confiscated and managed by a trustee: right now, Neji still has to pay a single cent and he is pursuing his case (together with Peter “Brokep” Sunde) at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.

Neji’s reaction to Yellow Bird’s request for bankruptcy? “It doesn’t really matter what they do, I still have no assets they can take” the man said. As a more elaborate response, though, Neji – now living somewhere in Asia – will consult with his lawyer to decide the best strategy for fighting this umpteenth battle started by the media industry against him.